ge~i~~~cal branch - british columbia · 2013-10-09 · mr. dennis e. bell, b.sc., graduated in...
TRANSCRIPT
CABIN CREEK
COAL EXPLORATfbN
1981
Coal Licences Group 244, Licences 595-601 Inchsive and 4742 (8 total)
Held by: $hell Canada Resources Limited
Operated d$:'.Crks Nest Resources Limited
Kootenay Land District, Southeast British Columbia
National Topographic Series: 82 G/2 (Lower Flathead)
Latitude and Longitude: 49 degrees, 08 minutes north,
114 degrees, 43 miriutes west
Consultant and Author: Dennis E. Bell, P. Geol. (Alberta) Max Air Exploration,Limited P.O.Box 878 Jasper, Alberta .- TOE 1EO
Field Work: September, GE~i~~~CAL BRANCH Submission Date:. Feb.
t ASSESSMENT !-PORT
+ ,+ A Crows Nest Resources
February 28, 1982
Ministry of Energy, Mines and Petroleum Resources British Columbia
Dear Sirs;
Enclosed please find our report on the Cabin Creek Project
Mr. Dennis E. Bell planned and supervised the 1981 geological field program on Cabin Creek B.C. Coal Licences held by Shell Canada Resources Limited and operated by Crows Nest Resources Limited. Gary Cox assisted with the field work, and the preparation of this report.
'v Mr. Dennis E. Bell, B.Sc., graduated in Geology from Dalhousie University in 1965. Since 1968 he has specialized in mapping, structural interpretation, and exploration supervision in the coking coal belt of British Columbia and Alberta. He has worked on projects similar to this property for this company and a number of other major coal companies. Mr. Bell is registered as a Professional Geologist in the Association of Professional Engineers, Geologists, and Geophysicists of Alberta.
Gary Cox, B.Sc., graduated in Geology from the University of Alberta in 1981.
Their work was carried out under the supervision of our District Manager, British Columbia, Mr. Frank Martonhegyi.
Yours truly,
Vice-President, Exploration
1981
CABIN CREEK
S.E. B.C.
VIEW NORTHWEST
The cliff of Top Sandstone overlying Seam 4 dips gently to the north from the ridge’s peak. The two 1978 Crows Nest Resources’ adits are in the light-brown clearings under the right half of the Sandstone.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1.0 summary
PAGE
‘r
2.0 Introduction
2.1 Coal Land Tenure
2.2 Location, Geography, and Physiography
2.3 Access
3.0 Work Done
3.1 Summary of Previous Work
3.2 Scope and Objective of 1981 Exploration
3.3 Work Done in 1981
3.4 Costs of Work Done in 1981
4.0 Geology
4.1 Regional Geology
4.2 Stratigraphy
4.3 Structural Geology
4.4 Hand-Trenching
4.4.1 BC CL 595: Trench 81-l
4.4.2 BC CL 595: Trench 81-2
4.4.3 BC CL 595: Other Trenches
4.4.4 BC CL Trench 77-l
4.4.5 BC CL Trench 77-2
't 5.0 Recommendations
6.0 Bibliography
9
9
10
11
12
15
15
18
23
34
35
35
38
38
40
42
44
4
ILLUSTRATIONS
SCALE CNRL NO. PAGE
FIG. 1 LOCATION MAP
FIG. 2 INDEX, GEOLOGIC COMPILATION, AND COAL LAND DISPOSITION
FIG. 3
FIG. 4
FIG. 5
FIG. 6
FIG. 7
FIG. 8
FIG. 9
b FIG. 10
FIG. 11
FIG. 12
FIG. 13
FIG. 14
FIG. 15
FIG. 16
FIG. 17
LICENCES TENURE STANDING.
FORMATIONAL DIAGRAM
STRATIGRAPHIC SECTION
TOPSS81 SCATTER DIAGRAM
TOPSS81 CONTOUR PLOT
ALLSS81 SCATTER DIAGRAM
ALLSS81 CONTOUR PLOT
ACCTR81 SCATTER DIAGRAM
ACCTR81 CONTOUR PLOT
ACCTR81 + ALLSS81 SCATTER DIAGRAM
ACCTR81 + ALLSS81 CONTOUR PLOT
TRENCH DIAGRAM CC-81-1
TRENCH DIAGRAM CC-81-2
TRENCH DIAGRAM CC-77-1
TRENCH DIAGRAM CC-77-2
TABLES
AA-823 1
1:50,000 AA-831 4
AA-601
l:l,OOO AA-832
TABLE 1 BEDDING ATTITUDES STEREOGRAPHIC RESULTS 24
1:50 AA-834
1:50 AA-835
1:50 AA-836
1:50 M-837
ENCLOSURES
(‘~5000 APPENDIX A GEOLOGICAL MAP1 J iSe-97
APPENDIX B STRUCTURAL CROSS SECTION 1:2,000 HC-97A 100 WEST
6
17
19
25
. 26
28
29
30
31
32
33
36
37
39
41
1 I
L h CAE.. _..__..
S.E. BPITIS” CcJL”MB,A
I LOCATION MAP I
I
.I
0.1 r.
CANADA /USA -...-...-...-...-...-...-...-... -...- . .._... -
we 1
HORSESROE RIDGE
EXTENSION TEEPEE MOUNTAIN
CROWN MOUNTAIN
B.C. CO&L
SPAR WOO
‘2, AL MRTA
CORBIN- MIODLE MOUNTAIN
EL
! ~:ILLvouRT h (\ HARVEY CREEK 1
METRES IV
-2-
1.0 SUMMARY
Through a two week period in September, 1981, the author conducted
a two-part exploration program in southeastern British Columbia on the
Cabin Creek coal licences held by Shell Canada Resources Limited and
operated by Crows Nest Resources Limited. The work was based from
Fernie and Spa-wood. Cost has been $21,578.00.
The first part consisted of detail hand-held plane table geologic
mapping of 1:2,000 scale on a enlarged 1:5,000 topographic base. This
was a direct continuation of the 1979 mapping done on the same base by
the author.
w
The second part consisted of hand-trenching of six locations. The
first two are part of the main reserve outlined by the mapping, and the
other fou; were discovered during the 1980 mapping by the author in
licence 595, which ccwers a separate area from the main area and which
was the subject of the 1980 report. The hand-trenching was supervised
and recorded by a Crows Nest Geologist; Gary Cox.
No equipment work was done in 1981. Analysis of the trench coal samples
is not yet complete and will be reported in the next Cabin Creek report.
All other trench data are contained in this report.
The mapping of 1979, 1980 and 1981 has been planned and executed by the Q
author as one linked whole. During 1978 Crows Nest Resources successfully
completed and sampled two adits in the two known thick seams, but no .4 1.
-3-
1.0 Summary continued. . .
mapping was done. This work is recorded in very complete detail in the
1978 report by J. Horachek, now located in the Calgary Head Office.
The mapping by the author has been aimed at outlining the extent and
structural orientation of the Kootenay Group section of interest, to
complement the adit work. All mapping to date on the main reserve has
been done by careful chain measurement from either the adits or the peak,
with altitude corrections included. As the main reserve consists of a
structurally-simple tilted erosional remnant of Kootenay sediments,
the attempt has been to bettter define its extent. Mapping is not yet
completed, and further work requires one or two helicopter landing sites
to be cut, as the distance to traverse further northwest along the main
ridge has become prohibitive in time.
Eight million tonnes of geological in place coal resc~urces were
estimated in the 1978 Cabin Creek Geological Report (Horachek, 1978).
This volume was calculated considering the seams with their thickness
at the adit sites.
Cabin Creek area is outlined on the following "Index, Geologic
Compilation, and Coal Disposition Map" of 1:50,000 scale.
w Fernie Formation
Legend Road: Highway, Main road.. Road: Loose surface, Dry, wealher.. Trackortrail....................... ---- Railwav.. ! I I / River.: ............................ a+===& srream ............................. ---A Conlo”rr m - .......................... Licence boundary. Y ..................
T.N
t,
S.E. B.C. CABWKIEEK
INDEX GEOLOGIC COMPILATION AND
COAL LAND DISPOSITION
-5-
2.0 INTRODUCTION
2.1 Coal Land Tenure
Eight licences (595-601 inclusive and 4742) compose Group 244,
1426 hectares.
The following table, entitled "Fig. 3, B.C. Coal Licences
Tenure Standing, Cabin Creek", gives details of tenure.
( .( I ’
_-_--, Y---~-~CROWS-~~NES’T-~~RESOURCES LIMITED (Explora.tion)
B.C. COAL LICENCES BLOCK: CABIN CREEK
TENURE STANDING GROUP: ‘2u
PROJECT: CABIN CREEK
YEAR: ,98,-x DATE: FEBRUARY. ,982
Page - 6 -
/
- 7 -
2.2 Location, Geography, and Physiography
The Cabin Creek Prospect is the most southerly of Crows Nest
REXXlPZ2S’ areas in southeast British Columbia. It is located
on the north side of the upper Cabin Creek drainage, which empties
southeast into the Flathead River. It is separated by several
massive lines of mountains from the licences of Lodgepole,
Harvey Creek, and Lillyburt.
The topography is steep, but less than on some other Crows Nest
properties. The geography and physiography is typically southern
Rocky Mountain in aspect. Forest is of medium density. The
overall character is similar to that of Lodgepole or the workings
of B.C. Coal's operations.
The peak of the ridge wer the main reserve is a relatively high
2,170 m (7,120 ft.). Forest cc~ver is mainly of medium-density,
and no part of the property is above treeline.
Snow~may be expected on the ground in May and in October. Mining
would be entirely above 1,900 m (6,200 ft.).
-8-
2.3 Access
At present, road access is from Fernie south 15 km on Highway 3
to the Morrissey turn-off, then 55 km southeast along the
Lodgepole and Ram Creek logging roads to the Storm Creek turn-off.
A further 7 km of four-wheel-drive trail leads to the impassable
water-bar constructed on the trail to the adits. Alternately,
the property is 15 minutes by helicopter southeast from Fernie,
and 20 minutes from Sparwood. As the drainage faces southeasterly,
away from Fernie and Sparwood, the area tends to be isolated.
Mapping lends itself to a blend of road and helicopter access,
as the driving time is 14 hours one way.
A longer road route to the Storm Creek turn-off exists south
from Lillyburt along the Flathead Road and northeast up Cabin
Creek.
-9-
3.0 WORK DONE
3.1 Summary of Previous Work
The 1978 program included geodetic ground control and location
surveys, photogrammetric mapping as well as driving and bulk
sampling two adits for analysis and tests.
The 1979 program of geologic mapping was done by the author in
the vicinity of the adits, to determine the attitude of the beds
and the extent of the reserve.
Work in 1980 consisted of detail mapping on a 1:5,000 scale by
the author on the geologically isolated northeast licence 595,
containing a separate and smaller erosional remnant of Kootenay
section.
v - 10 -
3.2 Scope and Objective of 1981 Exploration
Considering that adits have been completed and sampled in the
main reserve of two seams, and that even a casual aerial
inspection shows the reserve to consist of a simple, tilted
erosional block, 1981 mapping-was intended to continue a plot of
bedding attitudes on measured outcrop lines.
Careful measurement of outcrop position and attitude is required,
as the reserve is small in extent and mining decisions will have
a correspondingly small error allowance.
At the same time, mapping was intended to describe the thickness
and character of the stratigraphic section in order to guide
future mapping, drilling, and trenching.
V
- 11 -
3.3 Work Done in 1981
1981 work cost $X,578.00. Mapping was continued from the
1979 start on the main reserve, on the same scale and base.
Sufficient has been done to outline most of the extent of reserve
of the upper seam, but approximately half of the extent of the
lower seam remains to be done. Bedding attitudes have been
stereographically analyzed to determine the orientation of the
reS‘Zr”e. Thickness measurements of the stratigraphic units have
been done. Hand trenches were dug on each of the two major seams,
and on three coal occurences in 1980's northeast licence.
A stereographically-oriented grid has been established, to which
further work may be referenced. This will ensure that the least
possible apparentness in thickness and aspect will occur on cross
sections.
All geologic data has been plotted on the base and the geologic
map presented in the enclosures of this report is complete to date.
One 1:2,000 structural cross section has been prepared and it is
also included in the enclosures. This cross section is section
100 West on the grid and supersedes the similar, sketched cross
section presented in the 1978 report.
- 12 -
3.3 Work Done in 1981 continued. . .
The hand-trenching has provided coal thicknesses and samples
to complement the data from the adits and, as the measured thickness
of the upper major seam (Seam 4) is significantly thinner than
that from the adit, the need for further trenching is apparent.
3.4 Costs of Work Done in 1981
Detailed costs of the 1981 Cabin Creek geologic program are
contained in the Application To Extend Term of Licence on the
following pages.
Total cost of the 1981 program is calculated to be $21,578.00.
- 13 -
Ministry of Energy.Mines ard Petrckum FIescwrCeS
APPLICATION TO EXTEND TERM OF LICENCE
I, ... .Lerl.ia .GramELi~ k. .............. agent for 5hel.l. Canada. R,$s~rces. Limited. ...
.... ?..P ... BOX ?!?? .................. ...... CP!svY ...................... ,Idd... ., IAdd,".,
Alberta TZP ZHS ......................................................................
Valid FMC NO. 2.4.%42 ..................
hereby apply 10 the hdinirtrr 10 txtcnd the terrll Of Coal Licenccw N0I.L 595-601 & 4742 ............................ 8 Coal Licences. Group X244. 1426 Hectares ..............................................................................
for a f",,hl, period Of one year.
2,Properl"name Cabin Creek, Kootenay Land District .......... ...... ....... ......... ..... ...............................
3. I am a,,owing the m~orrinp co.1 ~icenscrr, NOW. to forfeit, ........ N.! ...........................
..............................................................................
4. I h."C txdormed,or saured IO be Performed,d"rinp ,hO period February. ??t!'. !.W!. ............. ....... .to
February 28 ..... ......... .................. 19 82 ...... .vorttothe"al"eof~tleart*. ... 21 578.00 ..?. ..........
on the location 01 C0.I lice”ce,l, aI followI:
C*TEGcmY OF WORK Licend~ NOlS~. Apporlioned cm
Geological mapping 601, 600, 599, 4742 17,770 ...............................................
mler work Ispecify, .................................................
ot,.property emu ho1 OH-1 RepOPt ........... !.LmS ........
5. 1 Wilh to apply a. .. 21.,.17B..Jm ... Of this “.I”. 01 war !. O” Co.9 Licencelr) Pwr,. ........ 4742.
..............................................................................
5. I wirll 10 pay cash in lie” Of work in the amDY”t Of a. ... N..A .................. an coal ~icence,~, NOW.
..............................................................................
FA 2s 82 .J. in..*;,. /
-14-
GEOLDGlCAL MAPPING Yrr q No 0 A,” ,H.d.rn~ So.. our.,ion
Reconnairlanm ............................................................. omi,: sur,sce ..... ..?@ .............. ..l:Z.OOQ ........ ..19.mao.days.....I.
""dergro"nd ............................................................. OthLI.Irpeci,y, ........................................................................
TOtalCost s.. .11.210.. ..... .!.
GEOPHYSlCAL,GEOC"EMlC/\L SURYEYS YeI 0 No q Merhod .............................................................................. G~id...............................................................................! Topgraphic ......................................................................... .
. Other ,I~CI‘“,...............................,.......................................~ .. TO,.! cost f ................. _I.
ROAD CONSTR”CTlON Yes 0 No I3 Length .................................... Width .................................. .;. on Licencdr, NO.,4 ................................................................... _i. Aecelrto .................. .._ ........................................................
Tolalcnrt I ................. .,,
SURFACE WCJRK Yes Q NO 0 L.“pth Width o*ptt! CPI
Trenching 9.0 ” ............... ..... .!..5 ...... .... .!..5 ...... ............. seam Tracing
., ......................................................... . .
Crorrc”tdng . ......... 31 0 m ofb'l'd trenches clean'e'd'd;t""'~
........................ ...!. Other~,IpeFify,....~..................................................................~
TO,., cat f .... .1.,.?99 .. : ..
“NDERGROUND WORK Y.3 0 NO ta NO. dAdi” Marimum L.“B,h No. .,,I HO,” Totd M.W” con
Ted A\di,f ................................................................. Othe, worliingr’ .....................................................................
Total Cart s ............ DRILUNG Yet q NO El
HOI. Si . . NO. 0, Ho,., T0l.l M.lrn con core: Diamond ...........................................................
Wireline ........................................................... Rotary: Convendonal ...........................................................
Revem circYI8dm ........................................................... Other.,rpecify, ....................................................................... Contractor ........................................................... Where il the core rtorw ..................................................
Total colt s ..............
LOGGING. SAMPLING. AND TESTlNG YCI a ND 0 Lithology: OM rampIer cl tort Implel q B”14 mlpler 0 Logs: Gamma-neutron 0 mnrity 0
0ther.1rpecify,..6.tre0c h S?mvles.taken ............................................... Testing: Pvxlimate analyIir 0 FSI 0 Warhabilit" 0
Carbonilation 0 Peirographic 0 Plarticity 0 . Other ,~pea~, ................................................... .... ....
Tata, tort s ........
.???. ..............
RECLAMATlON Yes g NO 0 Details .. Filled in trenches ....... ... ........................................... Tota, con I ... .!?! ......
OTHER WORK 6pecity dPt.ill, Yes 0 No 9 cat
..................................................................................
.................................................................................. Total tort s .............
OFF-PROPERTY COSTS Yes a NO 0
bm3 ..... ..FevlvsicPl.senvct ............................... TOI~ICOS~ s...1,885 .....
Total ExLw”dit”r.r I .21.-x8. ....
. . . s!Td2.+~~.w . . . .._..._... . . . . . . hLzl?T$&..
V
- 15 -
4.0 GEOLOGY
4.1 Regional Geology
V
Regional Geology of the coal belt of southeastern British
Columbia has become fairly well known in the last several years,
mostly as a result of Geological Survey of Canada work. The author
has compiled a biblography of the ten most relevant papers, dating
back to 1953. This is included in this report.
In 1979, D.W. Gibson of the Survey published his paper outlining
new lithostratigraphic units named the Mist Mountain and Morrissey
Formations of the Kootenay Group. This work was meant by the
Survey to be a synthesis of all individually studied and published
areas done in the past. This terminology is followed in this report.
Erosional remnants in the southeastern part of the East Kootenay
coal area (Cabin Creek, Sage Creek, Harvey Creek), isolated from
the Fernie Coal Basin, are commonly referred to as the Flathead
Coalfield.
Cabin Creek is close to and appears to have similar geology to the
nearby "Flathead Map Area" mapped and published upon by the
Survey's Price in 1962. Crows Nest work has been done in the
framework of this report.
- 16 -
4.1 Regional Geology continued. . .
The following page, "Formational Diagram, Cabin Creek," shows
the nomenclature used in this report, as well as six others
used in the past. Gibson and Price are included.
. .
FERYIL F”
LOOIEnY I.”
FLRYlL w
:::
0 1 Name ‘Kootenoy’ from Dowson, 1886
7
: : i ,
:i pi MB” T
page 17
- 18 -
4.2 Stratigraphy
Geological work until 1981 has not included, beyond an estimate
basis only, a measurement of the amount of coal-bearing sediments
(Mist Mountain Formation) left behind by erosion in Cabin Creek area.
This figure has a bearing on all further exploration, particularly
in drill planning and the search for seams in addition to the
two mineable seams already known.
During the limited amount of mapping 1981, which was directed
mainly at outlining on the ground the main reserve, the author
found one outcrop exposing the Weary Ridge - Moose Mountain contact,
within the Morrissey Formation, underlying the Mist Mountain.
This location is on the main trail leading up to the adits.
Construction of this 1978 trail exposed considerable outcrop along
its route up from Storm Creek drainage to the east. This has been
mapped in detail, and is presented on the geological map in the
enclosures.
The "Stratigraphic Diagram, Cabin Creek" on the following page
incorporates thicknesses based on outcrop along this trail. The
position of the contact has been projected onto the plane of the
section using the average strike of the bedding attitudes analyzed
in the stereographic work, giving a result of 164 m (538 ft.) of
Kootenay section remaining above the Weary Ridge - Moose Mountain
contact. .,/
-19-
24r
SEAM 4 llll
35m
SEAM 5 4.4n
L EGEND \BASE FAULTED ON MAIN TRAIL
m Prominant Massive Sandrtono
m Recessive Siltstone and Shale
Coal Seom
l5Om
IO&W
50m -
Om -
-- 3. --- --- .:. . : . .hkD’LE::. 2 :- ss...: ‘.il& .:: -- -- --
4.2 m IN TRENCH 77-2
- . . “7 . ,’ _. .: , :
. . ‘.
Top of Moor* Mtn. Member not mapped
I I I 1 0 10 20 30m
CABIN CREEK S.E. S.C.
STRATIGRAPHIC SECTION
- 20 -
4.2 Stratigraphy continued. . .
The plane table mapping, incorporating elevation corrections
based on hand-held clinometer readings, shows that the upper thick
seam (No. 4) is separated from the lower thick seam (No. S), by
35 In. Average strike and dip used in this calculation is that
shown by the sterographic work. This figure agrees closely
with the 38 m estimated by J. Horachek in the 1978 work.
J. Horachek also estimated that Mist Mountain thickness was
80 m. The author has not definitely established the top of the
Moose Mountain, but the measurements show (as drawn on the cross
section) that 84 m of section remains between the base of the Moose
Mountain and the lower seam.
The problem is that the lower Mist Mountain in this southern-most
portion of the coal field is known to contain unusually thick
sandstones which appear at even close range as similar to the
traditional Moose Mountain or Basal Sandstone. The situation is
similar to that at Lodgepole.
Above the Weary Ridge - Moose Mountain contact outcropping on the
main trail there is a covered interval in the bulldozer-opened
section of 1978, and so the top of the Moose Mountain is not exposed.
Further outcrop, however, exposes recessive coaly siltstones and
shales, and the author estimates that the Moose Mountain cannot be
thicker than 10 m as a result. This would mean a Mist Mountain
- 21 -
4.2 Stratigraphy continued. . .
remnant thickness of 74 m, or 79 m if a Moose Mountain thickness of
5 m (which is the minimum that can be seen).
The sterographic study shows, -however, that the average strike
along the trail differs substantially (by 49 degrees) from the
average strike in the area of the adits and so there is still
considerable ~OCJIII for change in this figure, depending upon the
projection used to put the contact onto the plane of the section.
A conclusion is that drill holes of maximum depth 150 m may be
expected c~er most of the area to penetrate into the Fernie beds
lying beneath the Kootenay coal-bearing units, and these will
discover any further thick seams present. As most work to date has
been targeted at the two known thick seams, which are in the upper
part of the section, it is desirable to investigate this
unprospected lower 84 m. This may be done by drilling holes which
are positioned to penetrate the two thick seams, to a greater depth.
The author has continued to use the 1978 designation of "Top,
Middle, and Lower Sandstone" for the three thick sandstone units
sandwiching the two major seams. They are easy to follow in the
area and allow precise mapping. The name "Lower Sandstone" is left
at this time to include all section between the base of the lower
thick seam and the Moose Mountain, as it appears to consist mostly
of thick, inter-lensing massive sandstone units, usually fine-grained
- 22 -
4.2 Stratigraphy continued. . .
but very tough erosionally, with unexposed interbedded recessive
units composing less than half of the total section. At one
point along the trail coal bloom is exposed, but a backhoe is
needed to trench it. Therefore the Lower Sandstone remains
prospective for the time being.
- 23 -
4.3 Structural Geology
Present Cabin Creek coal reserves are contained in a tilted
erosional remnant; it is possible to traverse completely around
the three massive cliff-forming sandstone units sandwiching the
two known thick seams. This was started in 1979 by the author,
continued by him in 1981, but much remains to be done.
As the Top Sandstone, overlying the most-important Seam 4, is
more followable than the Middle Sandstone underneath it, a
circular traverse, starting in either direction from the peak, was
done in order to outline as precisely as possible the extent of
the reserve on 1:2,000 scale. The method used was a hand-held
plane-tabling procedure, wherein the traverse line is plotted
directly onto the geologic base map in the field. Altitudinal
corrections were made at the time. Closure on this traverse,was
3 m. This position is drafted on the 1:2,000 map. There is yet
one unmapped area on the northwest side of the circle probably
underlain by the seam, as noted on the map.
The Sandstone's bedding attitudes measured on this traverse were
run through Golder Associates' computer program STEREO to plot
scatter and contour stereographs. The program, in this case of
monoclinally-dipping beds, computes also the average attitude.
The average attitude should approximate closely what will be found
in actual mining; the program was also used by Golder in planning
the Line Creek pit.
- 24 -
4.3 Structural Geology continued. . .
Average attitude is: strike 287 degrees true, dip 16 degrees
north. This strike was used as the baseline for the grid, originating
at the peak. By orienting cross sections at 90 degrees to this
baseline, in the average dip direction (017 degrees), most
apparentness in thickness willdisappear. The section included in
this report is 100 m West on this grid, and it was chosen as it
shows the maximum "length" downdip of the reserve.
Three other sets of bedding attitudes were run stereographically:
TABLE NO. 1
BEDDING ATTITUDE STEREOGRAPHIC RESULTS
NUNBER OF ATTITUDES STRIKE DIP
(1) TOPSS81 37 287 16
(2) ALLSS81 60 299 20
(3) ACCTR81 25 238 11
(4) ACCTRSl + ALLSS81 85 289 16
The individual scatter and contour diagrams are reproduced bn
following pages.
TOPSS81, Top Sandstone 1981, is the set of attitudes from the
circular, closed traverse around the Top Sandstone.
-25 STEREO*** 0121587 -- C~lltiSNEZil RESOURCES LTD -- STHLICTURAL MAPPING DATA.
iKX.vE~RsE - TOPSSBI
X
x
X
*‘y X
X
X
X
X
X
X
37 ORIGINAL POLES
N X X X
X X
X X
X
X
X
X
.
X
x
):f X
X
X
X
LEGEND X X --__-------- -______-_---
. 1 POLE X X 2 FIG. (6
+ 3 x * (1 X X X SCATTER DIAGRAM
5-b5,h,7,e.s S LONER HEMISPHEHF A-Z lO.ll#... F(JtIAL AREA PROJECTl(IN
/ MEAN VECTOR = Ih.lh/ 37h.hb
-26- . __.. r+tSTERED*r* 8121587 -- CROwSNEST RESOUHCES LTD -- STRUCTURAL MAPPING DATA.
TRA~VERSE - T1)PSSB-l-‘ -
cv 37 nHIGINAL POLES
N X X x
X X
X X
X
X
X
._ .~.~
X
X X
x X
X X
rlw X
x E X
X X
x X
X
X X
X X
X FIG. 7
X CDN701JH PLO1
LDWER bEMISPHEHE FOUAL AREA PH@Jt CTION
DENSITY CONTOUR LEVELS
(PERCENT)
X
X X X
S X
- 27 -
4.3 Structural Geology continued. . .
ALLSS81, All Sandstone Attitudes 1981, adds all other attitudes
measured northwest along the main ridge from TOPSS81 to this latter
set. This new set includes, structurally, Middle and Lower Sandstone
attitudesin this direction, and adds the lower, Seam 5 unmapped
reserve in this direction. The strike swing northerly is evident
(12 degrees), but the dip increase to 20 degrees is actually a
reflection of the fact that the southerly side of the tilted block
which was traversed is steeper than the northerly, downdip
untraversed side.
ACCTR81, Access Trail 1981, is a set of all attitudes collected
below Seam 5 down the main trail to the base of the Weary Ridge
outcrop where it is faulted. It shows a southwest swing in strike
of 49 degrees. This set is, in effect, as average strike and dip
for the Lower Sandstone in this easterly direction from the block
of main reserve.
The final set, ACCTR81 + ALLSS81, is a "summary" set of all
attitudes measured in the mapping, except those below the Weary
Ridge. It differs in strike from TOPSSSI by only two degrees,
and so the figure for TOPSSSI was used as the grid baseline.
-28-
+*tSTEHEO*t* - 8121587 -- CROWSNEST RESOURCES LTD -- STHUCTURAL YAPPING DATA.
.TR~VERSE -
X
X
X
x -
X
X
ACCSSU 1 ~.-
b17 OHlGlNAL PllLtS
N X X ):
X X
X
X
X
-
X
. .
--.- .
. . .t- . .
. .- .
. . *- / -- ,'
. . .-.... .
. . . . t.
X
X
x
X
x
X
x E X
X
X
X
x
X FIG. 8
r.
-;s-
***STEREO*** 8121587 -- CHOhSNEST RESOURCES LTD -- STRUCTURAL t’AF’PING DATA.
TRAVERSE - ALLSS.91
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
60 ORIGINAL POLES
N X X X
X X
X
X
X
X
X
X
. . . . . . ..----..
. . . . . . . --++*==z*+.. .,.------++*==31==+-.
.._---__ . ..--++.**++*=-------+-. .*-+*===:==:=*======*+-..
---- ----- ..-*---------**=I==*++-,. .-+*=I========***)*++-- _~~~. . .
..-,+***=:====*t--..--... ..-------++++-..
. . . . . . . ..---..
X
x E X
X
X
X
X DFNSITY CONTOUR X LF VELS
(PFHCENT) X X X
1 r-0+ 15*2O/AX s
M~xIWIY DCNSITY = 117.25 PtHCtbtI
X
X FIG. 9
x X C@NT[!UH PL 31
LOwEN HE Ml SPk+ERf EOllAL AREA PROJECTION
r
.~ _zwe __ _ ._ _ . ,___ _-__. .^__ .- -- , ._.‘... &u..*uw,-.~.. .__& _, - . - ***STEREO*** 81215R7 -- CROWSNEST RESOURCES LTD -- STRUCTURAI MAPPING OATA.
TRC*RSE - ACCTRRl
25 ORIGINAL POLFS
X
X
X
X
iw x & x . . . .
- .6*/
Y -. .
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
x E X
X
X
X
-31- A _ ___~__ -. _..-_ -A : .- .-~ . ..~ . . _, - _’ _ . -___-__ .._-. >.d .-. . . -.
**+.,jTEREOt*+ 8121587 -- CnnuSNf ST RESOURCES L TD -- STRUCTURAL MAPPING DATA.
TbERSE - ACClRAl
x
X
x
i id x ,i )(
-
X
X
x
X
X X
X
X DENSITY -0NTDUR X
WVELS (PERCENT) X
X 11 5 10 15 20 MAX
t * = MAXIMUM DENSITY -130.3Y PEPCFNT
25 DRIGINAL POLCS
N X X
X
X
X
x X S
X
x E,
X
k
x
X
X
X FIG. 11
x CONIL’UR PL3T
-KDmEMTSPmE‘ E(lU4-L ‘AREA-~-PROJECTION
,.
, , . _ . - .~.~. ___. ~1 ._ .~ . -32- . .-.. ,~ . . . ***STEREO*** 8121587 -- CROwSNEST RESOURCES LTD -- STRUCTURAL HAPPING DATA.
TRA”ERSES,~-.~.~.~..- .- -.,. -. ~_ - .-........_. ACCTRBl AND ALLSSBl-~---
85 ORItiI1UAl POLES
X
X
X
“xv
X
X
X
. . . . . JG: . . . .+- - - . .- . /-t. - . . *- -.. -:. .- . . . . . . . . . t. . .
X
LEGEND X ----______-_ ---__-____-_
I PnLE X 2
t 3 X * 4
,-y,b,7rH,9 -_ lO.ll....
X x s
X
X
X
X
x
X
7-E - X
X
X
X
X
X FIG. 12
L SCATTER DIAGWAn LOWER tiEMISPt+tHE F(j?IAL AREA PROJtCTIDh
/ MEAN VECTOR = 16.03/ 378.63
-33- - ***STEREO*** 0121587 -- CROhSNESl RESOURCES LTD -- STRUCTURAL MAPPING DATA.
TRAVERSERS ;-‘~-6CCTR6-1~--AND--ALLSSRl .---
b MS llRJGINAL PnLF~S
- - N --
x X X x X
X X
X
X
X
X
X
.WIlll : x
X -. -
X
X
X
X DENSITY CONTOUR X LEVELS
(PERCENT) 1.
Iv10 15 20 MAX X
&&s&*~T~-~-‘irH-eftJt A
X
X
X
x
X
x E X
X
X
X
X
X
X FIG. 13
x X X C 0 N 1 0 II 8 PI. 3 T s ( OWER bFh!ISPHF-RE
EOUAL AREA PRnJtCl IOh -.
r.
- 34 -
4.4 Hand-Trenching
One pair of hand-trenchers, supervised by Crows Nest Geologist
Gary Cm, trenched six locations in 1981 on Cabin Creek licences.
The Crows Nest-contracted helicopter stationed at Sparwood was
used for transportation.
Four of the locations are on licence 595, which covers the smaller
separate Kootenay erosional remnant investigated in 1980 by the
author. These locations were noted as coal bloom in 1980 mapping,
and their trenching fulfil15 one of 1980's recommendations.
The other two locations are in the vicinity of the adits on the
main block of reserve, and re-exposed ~~2-1977 trenching of the
two main seams where they cross the main ridge.
Gary Cox measured the results, and they are presented in the diagrams
of the following pages on a scale of 1:50. Thicknesses presented
are true. Trench bearings and inclinations were recorded, as well
as strike and dip, in order that the trenches may be constructed.
Sample analyses are not yet available at the time of writing.
They will be included in the next report.
-5.
- 35 -
4.4.1 B.C. CL 595: Trench 81-1
c This hand trench is located 300 m west of the helicopter landing
site drafted on the 1980 geologic map HA-78 in an outcrop labelled
"massive sandstone, interbedded siltstone-mudstone and chippy shale."
The trench exposed the footwall, but not the hanging wall, of a clean
2.18 m (7.2 ft) coal bed. Overburden became too deep on the
hanging wall side to uncover the seam's top, but there is room for
considerable thickness.
The footwall bed is 22 cm of slightly coaly mudstone. Underlying
is a dirtier 95-cm coal bed, containing two partings, thickest
is 10 cm.
Dip is steeply northeast at 56 degrees.
This trench is located also on 1980 geologic map HA-78, in the
lOWX, southerly area bounded by faults and marked "JKmm", at
an outcrop labelled, "10 m micaceous massive sandstone, coal
bloom from above". The location is in steep, tangled brush and
trees, and very difficult to trench.
A coal bed of 1.39 m was trenched, with only 11 cm of shale
hanging wall exposable above. Dip is 30 degrees north-easterly.
Difficult terrain prevented further trenching in the time available.
-36-
TRUE THICKNESS CROSS SECTION ALONG TRENCH CC-El-1
TRENCH BEARING ; 097O TRENCH INCLINATION ; FROM Om to 4.9!h ; OOVERTICALLY
FROM 4.95m to 8.0511 ; -lEoVERTICALLY STRIKE AND DIP OF STRATA ; 331’ 560 N.E.
Hmging Wdl
2.184m Coal with parting -thickmst 4 cm
slightly coally mudstow
.95m Cd; 2 pwtir&-thickest 1Oam
interbedded gray shale and silty mudstone
FIG. 14
O”;“_ METRES SCALE 1 : 50
S.E. B.C.
TRENCH DIAGRAM
e Werthamd Overburden
TRUE THICKNESS CROSS SECTION ALONG TRENCH CC-81-2
TRENCH BEARING ; 297’ I TRENCH INCLINATION ; OoVERTlCALLY
STRIKE AND DIP OF STRATA ; 320e. 30° N.E.
- 38 -
4.4.3 B.C. CL 595: Other Trenches
The other two licence 595 hand trenches exposed no measureable coal
and may be further disregarded. The first is marked on HA-78 as
a bloom occurrence 150 m west of 81-1, against the edge of the map
sheet, in an outcrop labelled, "2 m massive fine and medium sandstone
underlain by coal bloom". The second is located 150 m west from
the peak, to the north of 81-1, and marked on HA-78 with the label
"Coal bloom in patchy trees and rubble; would be difficult to trench."
4.4.4. B.C. CL 601: T=e"=h 77-I ~~~&[I~' ,j,/ 5-yc/yyTo
This trench is a ~-exposure of the pre-1977 trench placed on the
main ridge southeast from the adits, and its position is plotted
to an accuracy of 5 m on the geologic map included in the enclosure
of this report.
The coal is Seam 4, measured and sampled in Adit No. 2 in 1978.
J. Horachek, in the 1978 report, lists the thickness of the "upper
bench", this is, of the upper part of this split seam, as 5.9 m;
the thickness in the trench is 3.55 m. The thickness of the "main
parting", or split, in the adit is 2.3 m; in the trench it is 5.2 m.
The thickness of the "lower bench", or lower part of the seam,
is 5.9 m: in the trench it is 2.15 m.
Total thickness in the adit is 11.8 m coal in 14.1 m; in the
trench it is 5.7 m coal in 10.9 m. There are further, thinner ,,, .e.
partings in both adit and trench.
hghr src, ,:,,ii txdded Hanging Wall FIG. 16 sandstone
light brown shale -39-
1.9m shalsy Coal
TRUE THICKNESS CROSS SECTION ALONG TRENCH CC-77-1
TRENCH BEARING ;337O TRENCH INCLINATION ; FROM 0m to 8.8m IS @‘VERTICALLY
FROM 8.8m to 24m IS + 14*VERTlCALLY STRIKE AND DIP OF STRATA ; 305”25*N
&55m Coal; 2 shale partings
thickest 8 cm
brown to dark grey
weathered shale
Carbonaceour Shale with thin interbeds of shale
and Coaly Shale.
,2.152m Coal; 1 parting 9cm thick
0 0.5 1 2 METRES
SCALE 1 : 50
1
C&BIN CREEK 5.E B. E.
TRENCH DIAGRAM
cc-7-7-l .- -,
- 40 -
4.4.4. B.C. CL 601: Trench 77-l continued. . .
A conclusion is that much more work is needed on this seam, as,
should the thinning of the seam prove to be the rule rather than
the exception, the 1978 reserve estimate is far too high.
4.4.5 B.C. CL 601: Tra,d, 77-Z
This trench is a re-exposure of the pre-1977 trench placed also
on the main ridge southeast from the adits, and its position is
plotted to an accuracy of 5 m on the geologic map included in the
enclosures of this report.
The coal is Seam 5, the lower of the two adited seams. In Adit
No. 1 it is 4.40 m thick, including 1.32 m shale parting. At the
trench it is 4.18 m, including at least 1.2 m of partings. The
remainder of the coal appears quite high-ash.
.,/
-41- FIG. 17
4.18m
51m C&l: 1 pUtin 7a thldr
3.67
TRUE THICKNESS CROSS SECTION ALONG TRENCH CC-772
TRENCH BEARING ;343* TRENCH INCLINATION ;.lSWERTICALLY STRIKE AND DIP OF STRATA ;303’21’N.
0 0.5 1 2 METRES
SCALE 1: 50
-
- 42 -
b 5.0 RECOMMENDATIONS
Geologic exploration on Cabin Creek licences by Crows Nest Resources
in the four years of 1978-81 has been conducted in the months of September
and October only, by staff engaged on other properties elsewhere during
the earlier part of the field seas6n. A great amount of work was not
done in any year, therefore, but the total is now considerable.
With two adits in hand from 1978, approximately 90 per cent of the extent
df reserve of Seam 4 has been outlined in mapping and its structural tilt
has been determined. A much smaller portion of the extent of Seam 5,
the lower of the two seams, has been mapped. There is, or could be,
'v considerable extent of this seam northwest from its known position; the
furthest distance possible in this direction may be easily seen from a
helicopter, but the eye loses the seam's subcrop, amongst the boulder
patches and overlapping cliff lines exposed around the erosional block.
Mapping in this direction along the ridge will require one or two
helicopter landing sites to be cut, as the distance to hike has become
prohibitive.
As the 1981 ~-e-exposure of trench 77-2 shows the thick Seam 4 to have
thinned by half, further trenching around the erosional edge of the
reserve is especially called for, but most of this would have to be done
by backhoe, which requires trail building. There are several sites, however,
which may be hand-trenched. Both seams may yet be hand-trenched where b they cross the main ridge on the west side of the main block. These
positions are drawn on the geological map.
- 43 -
5.0 Recommendations continued. . .
One or more 100 - to 150-m drill holes may be planned on the main block.
The first of these should be drilled deep enough to reach the Fernie
shales; if no thick coal beds are found in the Lower Sandstones, further
holes may be less than 100 m in depth, deep enough to penetrate Seam 5.
The hand trenching on the isolated northeast licence 595 has found two
seams greater than 1 m in thickness. Recommendations for this block
remain as outlined in the 1980 report; mapping (and now hand trenching)
is complete and shallow drilling or backhoe trenching is in order for
the future.
- 44 -
6.0 SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY
1. Bell, D.E., 1980, "Cabin Creek Geological Report"; internal Crows Nest Resources Limited and filed with B.C. Energy, Mines, and Petroleum Resources.
2. Bell, D.E., 1979, "Cabin Creek Geological Report"; internal Crows Nest Resources Limited and filed with B.C. Energy, Mines, and Petroleum Resources.
3. Gibson, D.W., 1979, "The Morrissey and Mist Mountain Formations - Newly Defined Lithostratigraphic Units of the Jura-Cretaceous Kootenay Group, Alberta and British Columbia"; Bull. Canadian Petroleum Geol. v. 27, no. 2, pp 183 - 208.
4. Gibson, D.W., 1977, "The Kootenay Formation of Alberta and British Columbia - a Stratigraphic Summary": Geol. Sun. Canada, Paper 77-1A.
5. Gibson, D.W., 1977, "Sedimentary Facies in the Jura-Cretaceous Kootenay Formation, Crowsnest Pass Area, Southwestern Alberta and Southeastern British Columbia": Bull. Canadian Petroleum Geol. V. 25, no. 4, pp 767 - 791.
6. Hamblin, Anthony P., and Walker, Roger G., 1979, "Storm-Dominated Shallow Marine Deposits: the Fernie - Kootenay (Jurassic) Transition, Southern Rocky Mountains": Can. J. Earth Sci., 16, 1673 -1690.
7. Horachek, J., 1978, "Report on Exploration of the Cabin Creek Project": internal Crows Nest Resources Limited, and filed with B.C. Energy Mines, and Petroleum Resources.
8. Jansa, L., 1972, "Depositional History of the Coal-Bearing Upper Jurassic - Lower Cretaceous Kootenay Formation, Southern Rocky Mountains, Canada": Geol. Sot. America Bull., v. 83, pp 3199 - 3222.
9. Newmarch, C-B., 1953, "Geology of the Crowsnest Coal Basin, with Special Reference to the Fernie Area": B.C. Dept. Mines, Bull. 38.
10. Norris, D.K., 1959, "Type Section of the Kootenay Formation, Grassy Mountain, Alberta": Alberta Sot. Petroleum Geol. J., v. 7, pp 223 - 233.
11. Price, R.A., 1964, "Flathead Map-Area, British Columbia and Alberta": Geol. Sun. Canada Memoir 336.
12. Price, R.A., 1962, "Fernie Map-Area, East Half, Alberta and British Columbia, 82 G E1/2": Geol. Surv. Canada, Paper 61-24.